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Working paper
Is EU Supranational Governance a Challenge to Liberal Constitutionalism?
In: University of Chicago Law Review, Forthcoming
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Working paper
Shaming Human Rights
In: Forthcoming, International Journal of Constitutional law
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Working paper
Human Rights Experimentalism
In: American Journal of International Law, 2017, Forthcoming
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International law before the Courts: The European Union and the United States compared
In: Virginia Journal of International Law, Forthcoming
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Working paper
Europe's Raison D'Etre
In: The European Union's Shaping of the International Legal Order, Dimitry Kochenov, Fabian Amtenbrink, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2013
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Europe's raison d'être
Distinguished Lecture delivered on the occasion of the XXIII European Union Law course of the Academy of European Law, on 2 July 2012. ; What is the raison d'être of the European Union? Does it still make sense to ask this question today, at a time of social and economic crisis in Europe? Launched in 1952 as a kind of pilot project of limited economic integration with a view to securing greater peace and prosperity for its Member States, the EU has evolved into something much larger, more complex and more ambitious. This paper argues, contrary to the recent suggestion of an influential commentator, that the EU needs to abandon its 'messianic' origins and turn to ordinary process democracy, and that the EU's mission or raison d'être still matters to its legitimacy today. I argue that while the European Union at its origin was primarily inwardly focused on repairing and strengthening a damaged continent so as to deliver internal peace and prosperity, it has over the past decade become equally concerned with its external dimension. The importance of having a relatively unified European economic and political system to counterbalance the influence of existing and rising powers has become a significant part of the EU's raison d'être today.
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After the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights: The Court of Justice as a Human Rights Adjudicator?
In: Forthcoming, Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, Vol. 20 (2013)
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The Trajectories of European and American Antidiscrimination Law
In: American Journal of Comparative Law, Forthcoming
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The Road Not Taken: The EU as a Global Human Rights Actor
In: American Journal of International Law, Band 105
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The European Court of Justice and the International Legal Order After Kadi
In: Harvard international law journal, Band 51, Heft 1
ISSN: 0017-8063
The European Courts and the Security Council: Between Dedoublement Fonctionnel and Balancing of Values: Three Replies to Pasquale De Sena and Maria Chiara Vitucci
In: European journal of international law, Band 20, Heft 3, S. 853-862
ISSN: 1464-3596
The Lisbon Treaty No-Vote: An Irish Problem or a European Problem?
In: University College Dublin Law Research Paper No. 03/2009
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Working paper
The Principle of Subsidiarity and the Court of Justice as an Institutional Actor
In: Journal of common market studies: JCMS, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 217
ISSN: 0021-9886
The (Mis)Appropriation of Human Rights by the New Global Right: An Introduction to the Symposium
In: NYU School of Law, Public Law Research Paper No. 23-32
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